Channel 9 - Entries tagged with Line of BusinessMicrosofthttp://mschnlnine.vo.llnwd.net/d1/Dev/App_Themes/C9/images/feedimage.pngChannel 9 - Entries tagged with Line of Businesshttps://channel9.msdn.com/Tags/line+of+business
Channel 9 keeps you up to date with the latest news and behind the scenes info from Microsoft that developers love to keep up with. From LINQ to SilverLight – Watch videos and hear about all the cool technologies coming and the people behind them.https://channel9.msdn.com/Tags/line+of+business
enMon, 03 Aug 2015 00:48:35 GMTMon, 03 Aug 2015 00:48:35 GMTRev913125TechNet Radio: How Microsoft IT Developed Secure LoB Applications for the Mobile WorkforceBob Hunt welcomes Principal Security Lead Manish Prabhu to the show as they discuss how Microsoft IT developed secure LoB applications for Windows 8 and Windows Phone 8 to support its mobile workforce. Tune in as Manish shares with us some of the challenges and best practices his team implemented.

[7:46] What were some of the challenges your team encountered early-on with developing secure apps for Windows 8.

]]>https://channel9.msdn.com/Shows/TechNet+Radio/TechNet-Radio-How-Microsoft-IT-Developed-Secure-LoB-Applications-for-the-Mobile-WorkforceBob Hunt welcomes Principal Security Lead Manish Prabhu to the show as they discuss how Microsoft IT developed secure LoB applications for Windows 8 and Windows Phone 8 to support its mobile workforce. Tune in as Manish shares with us some of the challenges and best practices his team implemented. [7:46] What were some of the challenges your team encountered early-on with developing secure apps for Windows 8. [14:50] How did Microsoft IT discover these challenges? [17:05] What steps did your team take to circumvent these challenges? [25:30] What are some best practices you can share with us? After watching this video, follow these next steps: Step #1 – Download Windows Server 2012Step #2 – Download Your FREE Copy of Hyper-V Server 2012Step #3 – Start Your Free 90 Day Trial of Windows Azure If you're interested in learning more about the products or solutions discussed in this episode, click on any of the below links for free, in-depth information: Resources: Microsoft Virtual Academy Download Microsoft Private Cloud Evaluation Software Websites &amp; Blogs: Bob Hunt’s Blog Microsoft IT Showcase Virtual Labs: TechNet Virtual Labs: System Center 2012 Follow @technetradio Become a Fan @ facebook.com/MicrosoftTechNetRadio Subscribe to our podcast via iTunes, Stitcher, or RSS 1898https://channel9.msdn.com/Shows/TechNet+Radio/TechNet-Radio-How-Microsoft-IT-Developed-Secure-LoB-Applications-for-the-Mobile-Workforce
Tue, 22 Jan 2013 01:00:46 GMThttps://channel9.msdn.com/Shows/TechNet+Radio/TechNet-Radio-How-Microsoft-IT-Developed-Secure-LoB-Applications-for-the-Mobile-WorkforceChrisCaldwell, TechNet Radio, Bob Hunt, IT Media ServicesChrisCaldwell, TechNet Radio, Bob Hunt, IT Media Services0https://channel9.msdn.com/Shows/TechNet+Radio/TechNet-Radio-How-Microsoft-IT-Developed-Secure-LoB-Applications-for-the-Mobile-Workforce/RSSLine of BusinessSecurityapplicationsWindows 8Windows Phone 8Dive into the Summer for ISVs - Introduction into Unlocking your DataISV Summer Campaign - Introduction into Unlocking your Data

Summer's here and for the most of us this is the time we take that well-deserved rest and stand back a little fromthe daily grind. It's also a time for some reflection, a time to think about the things that we would like to do during the next couple of months.

This is why we will be serving you up with such a refreshing cocktail of new things to enjoy in 4 special issues of the MSDN newsletter. The second topic of this summer edition lets you dive into Business Intelligence.

Explore and dive into Business Intelligence

As you build line-of-business (LOB) applications, information workers need to have proper insights into their business data and ask for an appropriate analytics solution. Building these solutions is often a complex and time-consuming business, resulting in solutions that don't correspond precisely to the user's requirements and expectations. As an ISV, building applications on top of Microsoft SQL Server, you have the platform for business intelligence at your fingertips to help users unlock their business data through reporting, and self-service BI using Excel 2010 and PowerPivot.

Have a look at our website and discover a handpicked choice of articles, white papers and videos explaining what Microsoft BI has to offer for you as an ISV.

]]>https://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/liese/ISV-Summer-Campaign-Introduction-into-Unlocking-your-Data ISV Summer Campaign - Introduction into Unlocking your Data Summer's here and for the most of us this is the time we take that well-deserved rest and stand back a little fromthe daily grind. It's also a time for some reflection, a time to think about the things that we would like to do during the next couple of months. This is why we will be serving you up with such a refreshing cocktail of new things to enjoy in 4 special issues of the MSDN newsletter. The second topic of this summer edition lets you dive into Business Intelligence. Explore and dive into Business IntelligenceAs you build line-of-business (LOB) applications, information workers need to have proper insights into their business data and ask for an appropriate analytics solution. Building these solutions is often a complex and time-consuming business, resulting in solutions that don't correspond precisely to the user's requirements and expectations. As an ISV, building applications on top of Microsoft SQL Server, you have the platform for business intelligence at your fingertips to help users unlock their business data through reporting, and self-service BI using Excel 2010 and PowerPivot.Have a look at our website and discover a handpicked choice of articles, white papers and videos explaining what Microsoft BI has to offer for you as an ISV. Speaker : Nick Trogh Other interesting Summer Campaigns : - For Developers : Windows Phone 7 Mango, Visual Studio 2010 ALM - For Architects : Cloud Power, Windows Azure Platform - For IT Professionals : Virtualization, Desktop Deployment 111https://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/liese/ISV-Summer-Campaign-Introduction-into-Unlocking-your-Data
Tue, 19 Jul 2011 07:08:01 GMThttps://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/liese/ISV-Summer-Campaign-Introduction-into-Unlocking-your-DataAnthony de BruynAnthony de Bruyn0https://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/liese/ISV-Summer-Campaign-Introduction-into-Unlocking-your-Data/RSSApplication ServicesBelgiumBeLuxBIDataExcel 2010fr-beISVLine of BusinessLOBMSDNNL-BEPowerPivotSummerExcel 2010Prism & Silverlight: Part 10 - A Larger Example - "Email Client"This is part 10 of a series of screencasts illustrating some of the ideas found in "Prism" or the "Composite
Application Guidance" from the Patterns and Practices team that can be used to build Silverlight applications in a way that lends itself to testability and modularity.

In talking to customers building business applications with Silverlight I find that Prism (and it's friend
Unity) is frequently mentioned but not everyone has seen it and so I thought I would explore it myself and capture some of the results of that exploration here.

We start off with some fairly basic code which we move towards making use of dependency injection and modularity;

and then finally we try and bring some of these concepts together in a longer, more realistic example of a simple Email application built using the Prism framework - warning, this is a much longer session but I wanted something that draws things together;

The recommendation would be that you watch the 10 screencasts in order but if that feels like too long a process or if you're already very familiar with concepts like dependency injection and containers like Unity then perhaps watch the last screencast first
and then refer back to the previous screencasts if certain areas need more illumination.

I put the source code for Video 10 here for download as it's a bigger set of source and something you might want to explore after the video - this does not necessarily
represent "best practise" but is, instead, just meant to illustrate some of the Prism ideas.

]]>https://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/mtaulty/Prism--Silverlight-Part-10-A-Larger-Example-Email-Client
This is part 10 of a series of screencasts illustrating some of the ideas found in &quot;Prism&quot; or the &quot;Composite
Application Guidance&quot; from the Patterns and Practices team that can be used to build Silverlight applications in a way that lends itself to testability and modularity.In talking to customers building business applications with Silverlight I find that Prism (and it's friend
Unity) is frequently mentioned but not everyone has seen it and so I thought I would explore it myself and capture some of the results of that exploration here.We start off with some fairly basic code which we move towards making use of dependency injection and modularity;
Part 1: Taking Sketched Code Towards Unity
Part 2: Dependency Injection with Unity
Part 3: Modularity with Prism
Part 4: The Unity Bootstrapper
and then we move that code into the Silverlight world and try to illustrate some specific areas of Prism;
Part 5: Moving to a Modular Silverlight Project
Part 6: Shells, Regions, Views
Part 7: Commands
Part 8: Loosely Coupled Events with Event Aggregation
Part 9: Sharing Data via Region Contexts
and then finally we try and bring some of these concepts together in a longer, more realistic example of a simple Email application built using the Prism framework - warning, this is a much longer session but I wanted something that draws things together;
Part 10: A Larger Example: &quot;Email Client&quot;
The recommendation would be that you watch the 10 screencasts in order but if that feels like too long a process or if you're already very familiar with concepts like dependency injection and containers like Unity then perhaps watch the last screencast first
and then refer back to the previous screencasts if certain areas need more illumination.
I put the source code for Video 10 here for download as it's a bigger set of source and something you might want to explore after the video - this does not necessarily
represent &8582https://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/mtaulty/Prism--Silverlight-Part-10-A-Larger-Example-Email-Client
Tue, 27 Oct 2009 10:31:00 GMThttps://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/mtaulty/Prism--Silverlight-Part-10-A-Larger-Example-Email-ClientMike TaultyMike Taulty38https://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/mtaulty/Prism--Silverlight-Part-10-A-Larger-Example-Email-Client/RSSCompositeen-GBLine of BusinessPrismSilverlight 3UKDevTeamPrism & Silverlight: Part 8 - Loosely Coupled EventsThis is part 8 of a series of screencasts illustrating some of the ideas found in "Prism" or the "Composite
Application Guidance" from the Patterns and Practices team that can be used to build Silverlight applications in a way that lends itself to testability and modularity.

In talking to customers building business applications with Silverlight I find that Prism (and it's friend
Unity) is frequently mentioned but not everyone has seen it and so I thought I would explore it myself and capture some of the results of that exploration here.

We start off with some fairly basic code which we move towards making use of dependency injection and modularity;

and then finally we try and bring some of these concepts together in a longer, more realistic example of a simple Email application built using the Prism framework - warning, this is a much longer session but I wanted something that draws things together;

The recommendation would be that you watch the 10 screencasts in order but if that feels like too long a process or if you're already very familiar with concepts like dependency injection and containers like Unity then perhaps watch the last screencast first
and then refer back to the previous screencasts if certain areas need more illumination.

I put the source code for Video 10 here for download as it's a bigger set of source and something you might want to explore after the video - this does not necessarily
represent "best practise" but is, instead, just meant to illustrate some of the Prism ideas.

]]>https://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/mtaulty/Prism--Silverlight-Part-8-Loosely-Coupled-Events
This is part 8 of a series of screencasts illustrating some of the ideas found in &quot;Prism&quot; or the &quot;Composite
Application Guidance&quot; from the Patterns and Practices team that can be used to build Silverlight applications in a way that lends itself to testability and modularity.In talking to customers building business applications with Silverlight I find that Prism (and it's friend
Unity) is frequently mentioned but not everyone has seen it and so I thought I would explore it myself and capture some of the results of that exploration here.We start off with some fairly basic code which we move towards making use of dependency injection and modularity;
Part 1: Taking Sketched Code Towards Unity
Part 2: Dependency Injection with Unity
Part 3: Modularity with Prism
Part 4: The Unity Bootstrapper
and then we move that code into the Silverlight world and try to illustrate some specific areas of Prism;
Part 5: Moving to a Modular Silverlight Project
Part 6: Shells, Regions, Views
Part 7: Commands
Part 8: Loosely Coupled Events with Event Aggregation
Part 9: Sharing Data via Region Contexts
and then finally we try and bring some of these concepts together in a longer, more realistic example of a simple Email application built using the Prism framework - warning, this is a much longer session but I wanted something that draws things together;
Part 10: A Larger Example: &quot;Email Client&quot;
The recommendation would be that you watch the 10 screencasts in order but if that feels like too long a process or if you're already very familiar with concepts like dependency injection and containers like Unity then perhaps watch the last screencast first
and then refer back to the previous screencasts if certain areas need more illumination.
I put the source code for Video 10 here for download as it's a bigger set of source and something you might want to explore after the video - this does not necessarily
represent &q934https://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/mtaulty/Prism--Silverlight-Part-8-Loosely-Coupled-Events
Tue, 27 Oct 2009 10:30:00 GMThttps://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/mtaulty/Prism--Silverlight-Part-8-Loosely-Coupled-EventsMike TaultyMike Taulty0https://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/mtaulty/Prism--Silverlight-Part-8-Loosely-Coupled-Events/RSSCompositeen-GBLine of BusinessPrismSilverlight 3UKDevTeamPrism & Silverlight: Part 7 - CommandsThis is part 7 of a series of screencasts illustrating some of the ideas found in "Prism" or the "Composite
Application Guidance" from the Patterns and Practices team that can be used to build Silverlight applications in a way that lends itself to testability and modularity.

In talking to customers building business applications with Silverlight I find that Prism (and it's friend
Unity) is frequently mentioned but not everyone has seen it and so I thought I would explore it myself and capture some of the results of that exploration here.

We start off with some fairly basic code which we move towards making use of dependency injection and modularity;

and then finally we try and bring some of these concepts together in a longer, more realistic example of a simple Email application built using the Prism framework - warning, this is a much longer session but I wanted something that draws things together;

The recommendation would be that you watch the 10 screencasts in order but if that feels like too long a process or if you're already very familiar with concepts like dependency injection and containers like Unity then perhaps watch the last screencast first
and then refer back to the previous screencasts if certain areas need more illumination.

I put the source code for Video 10 here for download as it's a bigger set of source and something you might want to explore after the video - this does not necessarily
represent "best practise" but is, instead, just meant to illustrate some of the Prism ideas.

]]>https://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/mtaulty/Prism--Silverlight-Part-7-Commands
This is part 7 of a series of screencasts illustrating some of the ideas found in &quot;Prism&quot; or the &quot;Composite
Application Guidance&quot; from the Patterns and Practices team that can be used to build Silverlight applications in a way that lends itself to testability and modularity.In talking to customers building business applications with Silverlight I find that Prism (and it's friend
Unity) is frequently mentioned but not everyone has seen it and so I thought I would explore it myself and capture some of the results of that exploration here.We start off with some fairly basic code which we move towards making use of dependency injection and modularity;
Part 1: Taking Sketched Code Towards Unity
Part 2: Dependency Injection with Unity
Part 3: Modularity with Prism
Part 4: The Unity Bootstrapper
and then we move that code into the Silverlight world and try to illustrate some specific areas of Prism;
Part 5: Moving to a Modular Silverlight Project
Part 6: Shells, Regions, Views
Part 7: Commands
Part 8: Loosely Coupled Events with Event Aggregation
Part 9: Sharing Data via Region Contexts
and then finally we try and bring some of these concepts together in a longer, more realistic example of a simple Email application built using the Prism framework - warning, this is a much longer session but I wanted something that draws things together;
Part 10: A Larger Example: &quot;Email Client&quot;
The recommendation would be that you watch the 10 screencasts in order but if that feels like too long a process or if you're already very familiar with concepts like dependency injection and containers like Unity then perhaps watch the last screencast first
and then refer back to the previous screencasts if certain areas need more illumination.
I put the source code for Video 10 here for download as it's a bigger set of source and something you might want to explore after the video - this does not necessarily
represent &q1280https://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/mtaulty/Prism--Silverlight-Part-7-Commands
Tue, 27 Oct 2009 10:30:00 GMThttps://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/mtaulty/Prism--Silverlight-Part-7-CommandsMike TaultyMike Taulty2https://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/mtaulty/Prism--Silverlight-Part-7-Commands/RSSCompositeen-GBLine of BusinessPrismSilverlight 3UKDevTeamPrism & Silverlight: Part 6 - Shells, Regions, ViewsThis is part 6 of a series of screencasts illustrating some of the ideas found in "Prism" or the "Composite
Application Guidance" from the Patterns and Practices team that can be used to build Silverlight applications in a way that lends itself to testability and modularity.

In talking to customers building business applications with Silverlight I find that Prism (and it's friend
Unity) is frequently mentioned but not everyone has seen it and so I thought I would explore it myself and capture some of the results of that exploration here.

We start off with some fairly basic code which we move towards making use of dependency injection and modularity;

and then finally we try and bring some of these concepts together in a longer, more realistic example of a simple Email application built using the Prism framework - warning, this is a much longer session but I wanted something that draws things together;

The recommendation would be that you watch the 10 screencasts in order but if that feels like too long a process or if you're already very familiar with concepts like dependency injection and containers like Unity then perhaps watch the last screencast first
and then refer back to the previous screencasts if certain areas need more illumination.

I put the source code for Video 10 here for download as it's a bigger set of source and something you might want to explore after the video - this does not necessarily
represent "best practise" but is, instead, just meant to illustrate some of the Prism ideas.

]]>https://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/mtaulty/Prism--Silverlight-Part-6-Shells-Regions-Views
This is part 6 of a series of screencasts illustrating some of the ideas found in &quot;Prism&quot; or the &quot;Composite
Application Guidance&quot; from the Patterns and Practices team that can be used to build Silverlight applications in a way that lends itself to testability and modularity.In talking to customers building business applications with Silverlight I find that Prism (and it's friend
Unity) is frequently mentioned but not everyone has seen it and so I thought I would explore it myself and capture some of the results of that exploration here.We start off with some fairly basic code which we move towards making use of dependency injection and modularity;
Part 1: Taking Sketched Code Towards Unity
Part 2: Dependency Injection with Unity
Part 3: Modularity with Prism
Part 4: The Unity Bootstrapper
and then we move that code into the Silverlight world and try to illustrate some specific areas of Prism;
Part 5: Moving to a Modular Silverlight Project
Part 6: Shells, Regions, Views
Part 7: Commands
Part 8: Loosely Coupled Events with Event Aggregation
Part 9: Sharing Data via Region Contexts
and then finally we try and bring some of these concepts together in a longer, more realistic example of a simple Email application built using the Prism framework - warning, this is a much longer session but I wanted something that draws things together;
Part 10: A Larger Example: &quot;Email Client&quot;
The recommendation would be that you watch the 10 screencasts in order but if that feels like too long a process or if you're already very familiar with concepts like dependency injection and containers like Unity then perhaps watch the last screencast first
and then refer back to the previous screencasts if certain areas need more illumination.
I put the source code for Video 10 here for download as it's a bigger set of source and something you might want to explore after the video - this does not necessarily
represent &q2149https://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/mtaulty/Prism--Silverlight-Part-6-Shells-Regions-Views
Tue, 27 Oct 2009 10:30:00 GMThttps://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/mtaulty/Prism--Silverlight-Part-6-Shells-Regions-ViewsMike TaultyMike Taulty2https://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/mtaulty/Prism--Silverlight-Part-6-Shells-Regions-Views/RSSCompositeen-GBLine of BusinessPrismSilverlight 3UKDevTeamPrism & Silverlight: Part 4 - The Unity BootstrapperThis is part 4 of a series of screencasts illustrating some of the ideas found in "Prism" or the "Composite
Application Guidance" from the Patterns and Practices team that can be used to build Silverlight applications in a way that lends itself to testability and modularity.

In talking to customers building business applications with Silverlight I find that Prism (and it's friend
Unity) is frequently mentioned but not everyone has seen it and so I thought I would explore it myself and capture some of the results of that exploration here.

We start off with some fairly basic code which we move towards making use of dependency injection and modularity;

and then finally we try and bring some of these concepts together in a longer, more realistic example of a simple Email application built using the Prism framework - warning, this is a much longer session but I wanted something that draws things together;

The recommendation would be that you watch the 10 screencasts in order but if that feels like too long a process or if you're already very familiar with concepts like dependency injection and containers like Unity then perhaps watch the last screencast first
and then refer back to the previous screencasts if certain areas need more illumination.

I put the source code for Video 10 here for download as it's a bigger set of source and something you might want to explore after the video - this does not necessarily
represent "best practise" but is, instead, just meant to illustrate some of the Prism ideas.

]]>https://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/mtaulty/Prism--Silverlight-Part-4-The-Unity-Bootstrapper
This is part 4 of a series of screencasts illustrating some of the ideas found in &quot;Prism&quot; or the &quot;Composite
Application Guidance&quot; from the Patterns and Practices team that can be used to build Silverlight applications in a way that lends itself to testability and modularity.In talking to customers building business applications with Silverlight I find that Prism (and it's friend
Unity) is frequently mentioned but not everyone has seen it and so I thought I would explore it myself and capture some of the results of that exploration here.We start off with some fairly basic code which we move towards making use of dependency injection and modularity;
Part 1: Taking Sketched Code Towards Unity
Part 2: Dependency Injection with Unity
Part 3: Modularity with Prism
Part 4: The Unity Bootstrapper
and then we move that code into the Silverlight world and try to illustrate some specific areas of Prism;
Part 5: Moving to a Modular Silverlight Project
Part 6: Shells, Regions, Views
Part 7: Commands
Part 8: Loosely Coupled Events with Event Aggregation
Part 9: Sharing Data via Region Contexts
and then finally we try and bring some of these concepts together in a longer, more realistic example of a simple Email application built using the Prism framework - warning, this is a much longer session but I wanted something that draws things together;
Part 10: A Larger Example: &quot;Email Client&quot;
The recommendation would be that you watch the 10 screencasts in order but if that feels like too long a process or if you're already very familiar with concepts like dependency injection and containers like Unity then perhaps watch the last screencast first
and then refer back to the previous screencasts if certain areas need more illumination.
I put the source code for Video 10 here for download as it's a bigger set of source and something you might want to explore after the video - this does not necessarily
represent &q925https://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/mtaulty/Prism--Silverlight-Part-4-The-Unity-Bootstrapper
Tue, 27 Oct 2009 10:30:00 GMThttps://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/mtaulty/Prism--Silverlight-Part-4-The-Unity-BootstrapperMike TaultyMike Taulty0https://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/mtaulty/Prism--Silverlight-Part-4-The-Unity-Bootstrapper/RSSCompositeen-GBLine of BusinessPrismSilverlight 3UKDevTeamPrism & Silverlight: Part 3 - Modularity with PrismThis is part 3 of a series of screencasts illustrating some of the ideas found in "Prism" or the "Composite
Application Guidance" from the Patterns and Practices team that can be used to build Silverlight applications in a way that lends itself to testability and modularity.

In talking to customers building business applications with Silverlight I find that Prism (and it's friend
Unity) is frequently mentioned but not everyone has seen it and so I thought I would explore it myself and capture some of the results of that exploration here.

We start off with some fairly basic code which we move towards making use of dependency injection and modularity;

and then finally we try and bring some of these concepts together in a longer, more realistic example of a simple Email application built using the Prism framework - warning, this is a much longer session but I wanted something that draws things together;

The recommendation would be that you watch the 10 screencasts in order but if that feels like too long a process or if you're already very familiar with concepts like dependency injection and containers like Unity then perhaps watch the last screencast first
and then refer back to the previous screencasts if certain areas need more illumination.

I put the source code for Video 10 here for download as it's a bigger set of source and something you might want to explore after the video - this does not necessarily
represent "best practise" but is, instead, just meant to illustrate some of the Prism ideas.

]]>https://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/mtaulty/Prism--Silverlight-Part-3-Modularity-with-Prism
This is part 3 of a series of screencasts illustrating some of the ideas found in &quot;Prism&quot; or the &quot;Composite
Application Guidance&quot; from the Patterns and Practices team that can be used to build Silverlight applications in a way that lends itself to testability and modularity.In talking to customers building business applications with Silverlight I find that Prism (and it's friend
Unity) is frequently mentioned but not everyone has seen it and so I thought I would explore it myself and capture some of the results of that exploration here.We start off with some fairly basic code which we move towards making use of dependency injection and modularity;
Part 1: Taking Sketched Code Towards Unity
Part 2: Dependency Injection with Unity
Part 3: Modularity with Prism
Part 4: The Unity Bootstrapper
and then we move that code into the Silverlight world and try to illustrate some specific areas of Prism;
Part 5: Moving to a Modular Silverlight Project
Part 6: Shells, Regions, Views
Part 7: Commands
Part 8: Loosely Coupled Events with Event Aggregation
Part 9: Sharing Data via Region Contexts
and then finally we try and bring some of these concepts together in a longer, more realistic example of a simple Email application built using the Prism framework - warning, this is a much longer session but I wanted something that draws things together;
Part 10: A Larger Example: &quot;Email Client&quot;
The recommendation would be that you watch the 10 screencasts in order but if that feels like too long a process or if you're already very familiar with concepts like dependency injection and containers like Unity then perhaps watch the last screencast first
and then refer back to the previous screencasts if certain areas need more illumination.
I put the source code for Video 10 here for download as it's a bigger set of source and something you might want to explore after the video - this does not necessarily
represent &q1762https://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/mtaulty/Prism--Silverlight-Part-3-Modularity-with-Prism
Tue, 27 Oct 2009 10:30:00 GMThttps://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/mtaulty/Prism--Silverlight-Part-3-Modularity-with-PrismMike TaultyMike Taulty10https://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/mtaulty/Prism--Silverlight-Part-3-Modularity-with-Prism/RSSCompositeen-GBLine of BusinessPrismSilverlight 3UKDevTeamPrism & Silverlight: Part 9 - Sharing Data with Region ContextsThis is part 9 of a series of screencasts illustrating some of the ideas found in "Prism" or the "Composite
Application Guidance" from the Patterns and Practices team that can be used to build Silverlight applications in a way that lends itself to testability and modularity.

In talking to customers building business applications with Silverlight I find that Prism (and it's friend
Unity) is frequently mentioned but not everyone has seen it and so I thought I would explore it myself and capture some of the results of that exploration here.

We start off with some fairly basic code which we move towards making use of dependency injection and modularity;

and then finally we try and bring some of these concepts together in a longer, more realistic example of a simple Email application built using the Prism framework - warning, this is a much longer session but I wanted something that draws things together;

The recommendation would be that you watch the 10 screencasts in order but if that feels like too long a process or if you're already very familiar with concepts like dependency injection and containers like Unity then perhaps watch the last screencast first
and then refer back to the previous screencasts if certain areas need more illumination.

I put the source code for Video 10 here for download as it's a bigger set of source and something you might want to explore after the video - this does not necessarily
represent "best practise" but is, instead, just meant to illustrate some of the Prism ideas.

]]>https://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/mtaulty/Prism--Silverlight-Part-9-Sharing-Data-with-Region-Contexts
This is part 9 of a series of screencasts illustrating some of the ideas found in &quot;Prism&quot; or the &quot;Composite
Application Guidance&quot; from the Patterns and Practices team that can be used to build Silverlight applications in a way that lends itself to testability and modularity.In talking to customers building business applications with Silverlight I find that Prism (and it's friend
Unity) is frequently mentioned but not everyone has seen it and so I thought I would explore it myself and capture some of the results of that exploration here.We start off with some fairly basic code which we move towards making use of dependency injection and modularity;
Part 1: Taking Sketched Code Towards Unity
Part 2: Dependency Injection with Unity
Part 3: Modularity with Prism
Part 4: The Unity Bootstrapper
and then we move that code into the Silverlight world and try to illustrate some specific areas of Prism;
Part 5: Moving to a Modular Silverlight Project
Part 6: Shells, Regions, Views
Part 7: Commands
Part 8: Loosely Coupled Events with Event Aggregation
Part 9: Sharing Data via Region Contexts
and then finally we try and bring some of these concepts together in a longer, more realistic example of a simple Email application built using the Prism framework - warning, this is a much longer session but I wanted something that draws things together;
Part 10: A Larger Example: &quot;Email Client&quot;
The recommendation would be that you watch the 10 screencasts in order but if that feels like too long a process or if you're already very familiar with concepts like dependency injection and containers like Unity then perhaps watch the last screencast first
and then refer back to the previous screencasts if certain areas need more illumination.
I put the source code for Video 10 here for download as it's a bigger set of source and something you might want to explore after the video - this does not necessarily
represent &q1174https://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/mtaulty/Prism--Silverlight-Part-9-Sharing-Data-with-Region-Contexts
Tue, 27 Oct 2009 10:30:00 GMThttps://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/mtaulty/Prism--Silverlight-Part-9-Sharing-Data-with-Region-ContextsMike TaultyMike Taulty1https://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/mtaulty/Prism--Silverlight-Part-9-Sharing-Data-with-Region-Contexts/RSSCompositeen-GBLine of BusinessPrismSilverlight 3UKDevTeamPrism & Silverlight: Part 5 - Moving to a Modular Silverlight ProjectThis is part 5 of a series of screencasts illustrating some of the ideas found in "Prism" or the "Composite
Application Guidance" from the Patterns and Practices team that can be used to build Silverlight applications in a way that lends itself to testability and modularity.

In talking to customers building business applications with Silverlight I find that Prism (and it's friend
Unity) is frequently mentioned but not everyone has seen it and so I thought I would explore it myself and capture some of the results of that exploration here.

We start off with some fairly basic code which we move towards making use of dependency injection and modularity;

and then finally we try and bring some of these concepts together in a longer, more realistic example of a simple Email application built using the Prism framework - warning, this is a much longer session but I wanted something that draws things together;

The recommendation would be that you watch the 10 screencasts in order but if that feels like too long a process or if you're already very familiar with concepts like dependency injection and containers like Unity then perhaps watch the last screencast first
and then refer back to the previous screencasts if certain areas need more illumination.

I put the source code for Video 10 here for download as it's a bigger set of source and something you might want to explore after the video - this does not necessarily
represent "best practise" but is, instead, just meant to illustrate some of the Prism ideas.

]]>https://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/mtaulty/Prism--Silverlight-Part-5-Moving-to-a-Modular-Silverlight-Project
This is part 5 of a series of screencasts illustrating some of the ideas found in &quot;Prism&quot; or the &quot;Composite
Application Guidance&quot; from the Patterns and Practices team that can be used to build Silverlight applications in a way that lends itself to testability and modularity.In talking to customers building business applications with Silverlight I find that Prism (and it's friend
Unity) is frequently mentioned but not everyone has seen it and so I thought I would explore it myself and capture some of the results of that exploration here.We start off with some fairly basic code which we move towards making use of dependency injection and modularity;
Part 1: Taking Sketched Code Towards Unity
Part 2: Dependency Injection with Unity
Part 3: Modularity with Prism
Part 4: The Unity Bootstrapper
and then we move that code into the Silverlight world and try to illustrate some specific areas of Prism;
Part 5: Moving to a Modular Silverlight Project
Part 6: Shells, Regions, Views
Part 7: Commands
Part 8: Loosely Coupled Events with Event Aggregation
Part 9: Sharing Data via Region Contexts
and then finally we try and bring some of these concepts together in a longer, more realistic example of a simple Email application built using the Prism framework - warning, this is a much longer session but I wanted something that draws things together;
Part 10: A Larger Example: &quot;Email Client&quot;
The recommendation would be that you watch the 10 screencasts in order but if that feels like too long a process or if you're already very familiar with concepts like dependency injection and containers like Unity then perhaps watch the last screencast first
and then refer back to the previous screencasts if certain areas need more illumination.
I put the source code for Video 10 here for download as it's a bigger set of source and something you might want to explore after the video - this does not necessarily
represent &q1362https://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/mtaulty/Prism--Silverlight-Part-5-Moving-to-a-Modular-Silverlight-Project
Tue, 27 Oct 2009 10:30:00 GMThttps://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/mtaulty/Prism--Silverlight-Part-5-Moving-to-a-Modular-Silverlight-ProjectMike TaultyMike Taulty5https://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/mtaulty/Prism--Silverlight-Part-5-Moving-to-a-Modular-Silverlight-Project/RSSCompositeen-GBLine of BusinessPrismSilverlight 3UKDevTeamPrism & Silverlight: Part 2 - Dependency Injection with UnityThis is part 2 of a series of screencasts illustrating some of the ideas found in "Prism" or the "Composite
Application Guidance" from the Patterns and Practices team that can be used to build Silverlight applications in a way that lends itself to testability and modularity.

In talking to customers building business applications with Silverlight I find that Prism (and it's friend
Unity) is frequently mentioned but not everyone has seen it and so I thought I would explore it myself and capture some of the results of that exploration here.

We start off with some fairly basic code which we move towards making use of dependency injection and modularity;

and then finally we try and bring some of these concepts together in a longer, more realistic example of a simple Email application built using the Prism framework - warning, this is a much longer session but I wanted something that draws things together;

The recommendation would be that you watch the 10 screencasts in order but if that feels like too long a process or if you're already very familiar with concepts like dependency injection and containers like Unity then perhaps watch the last screencast first
and then refer back to the previous screencasts if certain areas need more illumination.

I put the source code for Video 10 here for download as it's a bigger set of source and something you might want to explore after the video - this does not necessarily
represent "best practise" but is, instead, just meant to illustrate some of the Prism ideas.

]]>https://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/mtaulty/Prism--Silverlight-Part-2-Dependency-Injection-with-Unity
This is part 2 of a series of screencasts illustrating some of the ideas found in &quot;Prism&quot; or the &quot;Composite
Application Guidance&quot; from the Patterns and Practices team that can be used to build Silverlight applications in a way that lends itself to testability and modularity.In talking to customers building business applications with Silverlight I find that Prism (and it's friend
Unity) is frequently mentioned but not everyone has seen it and so I thought I would explore it myself and capture some of the results of that exploration here.We start off with some fairly basic code which we move towards making use of dependency injection and modularity;
Part 1: Taking Sketched Code Towards Unity
Part 2: Dependency Injection with Unity
Part 3: Modularity with Prism
Part 4: The Unity Bootstrapper
and then we move that code into the Silverlight world and try to illustrate some specific areas of Prism;
Part 5: Moving to a Modular Silverlight Project
Part 6: Shells, Regions, Views
Part 7: Commands
Part 8: Loosely Coupled Events with Event Aggregation
Part 9: Sharing Data via Region Contexts
and then finally we try and bring some of these concepts together in a longer, more realistic example of a simple Email application built using the Prism framework - warning, this is a much longer session but I wanted something that draws things together;
Part 10: A Larger Example: &quot;Email Client&quot;
The recommendation would be that you watch the 10 screencasts in order but if that feels like too long a process or if you're already very familiar with concepts like dependency injection and containers like Unity then perhaps watch the last screencast first
and then refer back to the previous screencasts if certain areas need more illumination.
I put the source code for Video 10 here for download as it's a bigger set of source and something you might want to explore after the video - this does not necessarily
represent &q2132https://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/mtaulty/Prism--Silverlight-Part-2-Dependency-Injection-with-Unity
Tue, 27 Oct 2009 10:29:00 GMThttps://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/mtaulty/Prism--Silverlight-Part-2-Dependency-Injection-with-UnityMike TaultyMike Taulty3https://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/mtaulty/Prism--Silverlight-Part-2-Dependency-Injection-with-Unity/RSSCompositeen-GBLine of BusinessPrismSilverlight 3UKDevTeamPrism & Silverlight: Part 1 - Taking Sketched Code Towards UnityPrism" or the "Composite
Application Guidance" from the Patterns and Practices team that can be used to build Silverlight applications in a way that lends itself to testability and modularity.

In talking to customers building business applications with Silverlight I find that Prism (and it's friend
Unity) is frequently mentioned but not everyone has seen it and so I thought I would explore it myself and capture some of the results of that exploration here.

We start off with some fairly basic code which we move towards making use of dependency injection and modularity;

and then finally we try and bring some of these concepts together in a longer, more realistic example of a simple Email application built using the Prism framework - warning, this is a much longer session but I wanted something that draws things together;

The recommendation would be that you watch the 10 screencasts in order but if that feels like too long a process or if you're already very familiar with concepts like dependency injection and containers like Unity then perhaps watch the last screencast first
and then refer back to the previous screencasts if certain areas need more illumination.

I put the source code for Video 10 here for download as it's a bigger set of source and something you might want to explore after the video - this does not necessarily
represent "best practise" but is, instead, just meant to illustrate some of the Prism ideas.
]]>https://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/mtaulty/Prism--Silverlight-Part-1-Taking-Sketched-Code-Towards-UnityThis is part 1 of a series of screencasts illustrating some of the ideas found in &quot;Prism&quot; or the &quot;Composite
Application Guidance&quot; from the Patterns and Practices team that can be used to build Silverlight applications in a way that lends itself to testability and modularity.In talking to customers building business applications with Silverlight I find that Prism (and it's friend
Unity) is frequently mentioned but not everyone has seen it and so I thought I would explore it myself and capture some of the results of that exploration here.We start off with some fairly basic code which we move towards making use of dependency injection and modularity;
Part 1: Taking Sketched Code Towards Unity
Part 2: Dependency Injection with Unity
Part 3: Modularity with Prism
Part 4: The Unity Bootstrapper
and then we move that code into the Silverlight world and try to illustrate some specific areas of Prism;
Part 5: Moving to a Modular Silverlight Project
Part 6: Shells, Regions, Views
Part 7: Commands
Part 8: Loosely Coupled Events with Event Aggregation
Part 9: Sharing Data via Region Contexts
and then finally we try and bring some of these concepts together in a longer, more realistic example of a simple Email application built using the Prism framework - warning, this is a much longer session but I wanted something that draws things together;
Part 10: A Larger Example: &quot;Email Client&quot;
The recommendation would be that you watch the 10 screencasts in order but if that feels like too long a process or if you're already very familiar with concepts like dependency injection and containers like Unity then perhaps watch the last screencast first
and then refer back to the previous screencasts if certain areas need more illumination.
I put the source code for Video 10 here for download as it's a bigger set of source and something you might want to explore after the video - this does not necessarily
represent &quot;best pr2152https://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/mtaulty/Prism--Silverlight-Part-1-Taking-Sketched-Code-Towards-Unity
Tue, 27 Oct 2009 10:29:00 GMThttps://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/mtaulty/Prism--Silverlight-Part-1-Taking-Sketched-Code-Towards-UnityMike TaultyMike Taulty34https://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/mtaulty/Prism--Silverlight-Part-1-Taking-Sketched-Code-Towards-Unity/RSSCompositeen-GBLine of BusinessPrismSilverlight 3UKDevTeamUNPLUGGED Silverlight 3 Line of Business with RIA Services May PreviewI have
previously written about the
UNPLUGGED road trip that
Mike, Nathan and I have been on.

]]>https://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/Jafa/UNPLUGGED-Silverlight-3-Line-of-Business-with-RIA-Services-May-Preview
I have
previously written about the
UNPLUGGED road trip that
Mike, Nathan and I have been on.
I also mentioned that I would be making a screen cast and sharing the source code from the Silverlight 3 Line of Business demo that I delivered. The demo that I presented was based on
Scott Morrison’s two sessions from Tech.Ed North America.
Watch a video of my session using Smooth Streaming.
The source code for these presentations is available below:
WUX 303: Building Data-Driven RIAs with Microsoft ASP.NET and Microsoft Silverlight
WUX 308: Delivering Rich User Experiences for Business Applications with Microsoft Silverlight 3
I also updated my presentation to cover the May release of RIA Services from http://code.msdn.microsoft.com/RiaServices (this
site also includes tutorials and white papers).
Blog post http://tr.im/silverlight3LOB
3339https://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/Jafa/UNPLUGGED-Silverlight-3-Line-of-Business-with-RIA-Services-May-Preview
Thu, 04 Jun 2009 23:55:00 GMThttps://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/Jafa/UNPLUGGED-Silverlight-3-Line-of-Business-with-RIA-Services-May-PreviewNigelNigel1https://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/Jafa/UNPLUGGED-Silverlight-3-Line-of-Business-with-RIA-Services-May-Preview/RSSLine of BusinessLOBMSDNNew ZealandRIARIA ServicesSilverlightSilverlight 3Unplugged